12 research outputs found

    Language production impairments in patients with a first episode of psychosis

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    A multi-element psychosocial intervention for early psychosis (GET UP PIANO TRIAL) conducted in a catchment area of 10 million inhabitants: study protocol for a pragmatic cluster randomized controlled trial

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    Multi-element interventions for first-episode psychosis (FEP) are promising, but have mostly been conducted in non-epidemiologically representative samples, thereby raising the risk of underestimating the complexities involved in treating FEP in 'real-world' services

    Accelerated elimination from the circulation of homologous aged red blood cells in rats bearing anti-spectrin antibodies

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    In order to analyse a possible role of anti-spectrin antibodies in the clearance of aged red blood cells (RBC), a homologous system was employed, whereby a population of aged RBC, obtained by hypertransfusion, was injected into rats bearing a high level of anti-spectrin antibodies, following immunization with spectrin. The aged RBC bound the anti-spectrin antibodies 'in vitro' and were eliminated from circulation in spectrin-treated rats at a faster rate than in control rats with naturally occurring antibodies. The analysis of the clearance curves revealed aged RBC of heterogeneous lifespans: two principal populations of short- and longer-living could be identified. In rats with anti-spectrin antibodies, the survival of the short-living population was further reduced. However, the similar kinetics of elimination of aged RBC in the two groups (with naturally-occurring and induced antibodies, respectively) suggest that anti-spectrin antibodies strengthened the intervention of the naturally-occurring ones. On the basis of these results, we assume that during their aging in circulation, RBC can accumulate surface alterations to make spectrin accessible to antibodies so that, in addition to anti-band 3 antibodies, anti-spectrin antibodies may contribute to their elimination

    RABBIT IgG ANTIBODIES AGAINST CORD RED BLOOD CELL MEMBRANES BIND TO COMPLEMENT RECEPTOR 1 (CD35)

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    We have previously shown that a subpopulation of cord/fetal red blood cells (RBC) binds rabbit IgG antibodies raised against cord RBC and absorbed on adult RBC (F-IgG), while control IgG, raised against and absorbed on adult RBC (A-IgG), fails to do so. In the present study, F-IgG maintained its binding to cord RBC surface antigens following absorption on spectrin but not after absorption on skeleton-stripped RBC membranes. Spectrin-absorbed F-IgG- but not A-IgG-affinity-purified material from cord RBC contained polypeptides with apparent MW of complement receptor 1 (CR1) allotypes. Moreover, on immunoblotting these polypeptides reacted with 125I-F-IgG as well as with 125I-anti-CR1 mAb, and binding of 125I-anti-CR1 mAb was inhibited by unlabelled F-IgG. In addition, cord RBC incubated with F-IgG prior to reaction with anti-CR1 showed decreased fluorescence intensity on flow cytometry. Taken together the results suggest that F-IgG binds to CR1 which shows increased expression/accessibility on a subpopulation of cord/fetal RBC

    Language production impairments in patients with a first episode of psychosis

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    Language production has often been described as impaired in psychiatric diseases such as in psychosis. Nevertheless, little is known about the characteristics of linguistic difficulties and their relation with other cognitive domains in patients with a first episode of psychosis (FEP), either affective or non-affective. To deepen our comprehension of linguistic profile in FEP, 133 patients with FEP (95 non-affective, FEP-NA; 38 affective, FEP-A) and 133 healthy controls (HC) were assessed with a narrative discourse task. Speech samples were systematically analyzed with a well-established multilevel procedure investigating both micro- (lexicon, morphology, syntax) and macro-linguistic (discourse coherence, pragmatics) levels of linguistic processing. Executive functioning and IQ were also evaluated. Both linguistic and neuropsychological measures were secondarily implemented with a machine learning approach in order to explore their predictive accuracy in classifying participants as FEP or HC. Compared to HC, FEP patients showed language production difficulty at both micro- and macro-linguistic levels. As for the former, FEP produced shorter and simpler sentences and fewer words per minute, along with a reduced number of lexical fillers, compared to HC. At the macro-linguistic level, FEP performance was impaired in local coherence, which was paired with a higher percentage of utterances with semantic errors. Linguistic measures were not correlated with any neuropsychological variables. No significant differences emerged between FEP-NA and FEP-A (p≥0.02, after Bonferroni correction). Machine learning analysis showed an accuracy of group prediction of 76.36% using language features only, with semantic variables being the most impactful. Such a percentage was enhanced when paired with clinical and neuropsychological variables. Results confirm the presence of language production deficits already at the first episode of the illness, being such impairment not related to other cognitive domains. The high accuracy obtained by the linguistic set of features in classifying groups support the use of machine learning methods in neuroscience investigations
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